Tag Archives: Abraham Lincoln

Lincoln’s Death Reached to the Finger Lakes

The death of Abraham Lincoln was a tragedy to America, and to the world, but it also brought deep suffering to our Finger Lakes region. For one thing, TWO attacks were made that night, and the second was an attack on Secretary of State William H. Seward, a resident of Auburn.

Lewis Payne (or Powell) presented himself at Seward’s house as a messenger, then bulled his way in and upstairs. Attacking with a knife he did manage to slash the bedridden Seward badly, along with two of Seward’s sons, a soldier nurse, and a servant, besides roughing up the butler and Seward’s daughter, all of whom tried to protect the injured man, before escaping into the night. Seward, who had been badly injured in a carriage accident, was supported in a heavy metal frame, which probably saved his life by deflecting some of the blows. Although badly slashed, he managed to heave himself off the bed into the space between the bed and the wall, giving himself a little prottection.

Powell/Payne finally fled, and was later executed. Seward continued in stellar service to his country, including the purchase of Alaska. But one side of his face forever sagged, thanks to the slashing he got from Lewis Paine.

The other regional connection is Major Henry Rathbone. We often hear that the major was from Steuben County, but I’m pretty sure that that’s not true. He was one of the clan for whom the Town of Rathbone was named, but I’m not sure how close.

Hardly ANYONE, including their own son, seemed to want to go to the play with the Lincolns. They finally settled on Major Rathbone, who agreed to bring his fiancee Clara Harris.

When John Wilkes Booth crept into the presidential box Mary Lincoln was teasing Abe about holding her hand: “What will Miss Harris think?” Lincoln replied, “She won’t think anything of it” — the last words he ever spoke.

Booth, who was well familiar with the play, waited for a burst of laughter and used those laughs to cover the sound of his shot as he fired one bullet into the back of Abraham Lincoln’s head. While the audience missed the sound of the shot, experienced soldier Major Rathbone did not. He instantly sprang upon Booth, who dropped his single-shot Deringer and slashed Rathbone with his large knife, cutting to the bone from shoulder to elbow.

This got him free long enough to rush to the front of the box, where Rathbone grabbed him again. This, plus catching his spur on some bunting, apparently threw Booth off enough that he landed badly — it was something like a 12-foot drop to the stage — and broke his leg. Rathbone shouted to stop the man, and a soldier in the audience vaulted across the orchestra pit and set out in pursuit. Booth, however, made it to the alleyway and his waiting horse, then fled the city before word got out.

A doctor was lifted up from the audience while others pounded on the door that Booth had barred, which the profusely-bleeding Major Rathbone opened. Lincoln was carried out of the box and down the stairs to a house across the street. Here, as Miss Harris tried to comfort the justifiably hysterical Mrs. Lincoln, Major Rathbone finally passed out from loss of blood, and doctors recognized for the first time how gravely wounded he was.

Sadly, that was not the end of the tragedy. Clara Harris and Henry Rathbone, who were stepbrother and stepsister, married in 1867, after an eight-year engagement. He became consumed… unjustly and unrealistically… by his perception that he had failed to protect the president, and Lincoln had died because of his failure. But that had not been his assignment, and short of pre-emptively shooting anyone who walked through the door, it’s hard to see how he could have prevented it. His actions were heroic — instantly and bare-handedly springing upon a killer with a gun, and continuing the fight after being gravely wounded.

But none of those facts mattered. Two days before Christmas in 1883, while serving as U.S. consul in Hanover, Germany, he attacked his three children. When Clara Harris Rathbone rushed to their defense, he killed her with a knife and a hand gun… the same types of weapons John Wilkes Booth had used. He stabbed himself repeatedly but was taken into custody and died in 1911 in a German mental institution. He was buried with his wife, and their remains were disposed of in 1952. Their son, 13 years old at the time of the killing, was later elected to Congress from Illinois.

Perhaps there were other forces at work – Rathbone had fought through the Civil War, including what is STILL the bloodiest day in American history, at Antietam – so maybe PTSD was already eating away at his soul on that night. At any rate, Booth’s ghastly plot had a very long reach.

Trash-Talking Lincoln in the 1860s

On Friday I’m wrapping up Steuben County Historical Society’s Civil War sesquicentennial series with a presentation on the end of the war, and the death of Lincoln, so I hope you’ll join us. But in the process of doing that research, I found out quite a lot about local OPPOSITION to Lincoln during the war.

We think of our region as being rock-ribbed Republican and dedicated to the abolition of slavery, but that’s wishful thinking. While overall people in the Finger Lakes and Southern Tier supported Lincoln, there was also strong, and even hateful, opposition against him. And the region as a whole was very iffy on abolition.

Newspapers tended to be political party mouthpieces in those days, and the Steuben County seat of Bath had two… the “Courier” for Republicans, and the “Farmer’s Advocate” for Democrats.

The “Advocate” was in something of a bind, wanting to support the war without supporting the president – “Fight against Davis, argue against Lincoln.” They steered a masterly path of applauding Union victories while sneering that the administration had nothing to do with them – our brave soldiers won the fight despite Lincoln’s incompetence.

If Union troops lost, of course that was all Lincoln’s fault. Disastrous defeat at Fredericksburg was a “bloodthirsty atrocity of the radicals” – radicals being those Republicans who, UNlike Lincoln, were strongly committed to abolishing slavery, and doing it fast.

To give them their due, the editors published presidential proclamations in full, even if criticizing them fiercely in other columns. They also insisted that the highly unpopular draft law had been passed in the regular manner, and must be obeyed until and unless set aside by the courts. On July 1, 1863, with Confederate forces rampaging deep into Pennsylvania, “Advocate” editors announced that at the government’s request they were joining a general withholding of information on Union troop movements.

They did tend to overoptimistically view the south’s military condition, reporting in 1862 on the effectiveness of the Confederate draft, the huge size of the Confederate army, and the good provisioning of that army. Not one word of this was true. On July 1, 1863, they proclaimed “Vicksburg is impregnable” and it did in fact manage to hold out for three more days.

In one bizarre 1862 passage they supposedly report rebel prisoners as stating that if the states had been given permission to leave the Union the previous year, they would already have rejoined the Union. The supposed process seems to be (1) the southern states were not even thinking about seceding. (2) But the northern states, apparently out of the blue, told them they couldn’t. (3) So they did. (4) If no one had fussed, they then would have immediately joined back up. This, of course, is gibberish of the type you could ONLY find in an official party paper.

They also mocked Lincoln constantly… his having a bodyguard of troops, which no other president had had; his accent and ruralisms; his looks; his nickname of “Honest” Abe. For good measure they scorned his wife, sneering whenever one of her family members was killed fighting for the south.

And, they stressed that Lincoln’s actions, especially the Emancipation Proclamation, would make it impossible to restore “the Union as it was,” slavery and all. They didn’t face the fact that the south had HAD the Union as it was, and left it.

Unsurprisingly, much of their opposition was racist. They attack African Americans in the foulest and vilest terms – not for them the genteel circumlocutions that ooze from our TV today. In some of their mildest attacks:
“The relation of master and slave is a proper relationship.”
“When the Abolitionists began their crusade against he South, there lived 4,000,000 of as contented, well fed, well clad and well to do peasantry as ever lived on the face of the earth.”
“This war is to ripen into the horrible scenes of St. Domingo.”

To call slaves a contented, well-to-do peasantry is staggering chutzpah.

They seem to think that worst insult they can employ against Republican leaders and supporters is to call them black, which they do frequently, adding that the Republican plan is to bring white working men down to the level of the Negro.

Despite charges that Lincoln is a despot, a tyrant, a dictator, such papers abounded… I understand the one in Penn Yan was also vitriolic. Erastus Corning was a public and prominent Lincoln critic. A regular Congressional election took place in 1862, and Lincoln’s party lost ground, while still retaining control. Despite the best (or worst) efforts on the part of the “Advocate,” Steuben County increased its Republican vote in 1863.

Lincoln also beat off challengers from within his own party in 1864, and then won re-election against a popular general. But a month and ten days into his second term, a southern fanatic murdered him. That’s what we’ll be talking about 4 PM Friday, September 11 at Bath Fire Hall. Hope to see you there.